'Overdue': Locations for new elementary, high schools in Regina announced as school divisions wrestle with increasing enrollment
The provincial government and City of Regina announced the locations for future joint use elementary and high schools in the city’s east end on Monday.
Both schools will be located in The Towns neighbourhood , near Costco, and combined will be able to accommodate 3,400 students.
“We need these schools as soon as possible,” Minister of Education Jeremy Cockrill told reporters following the announcement. “There's some major growth happening in our two major cities, which is excellent.”
The provincial government announced its intention to build the schools in the 2024 budget last March.
The joint use elementary school will hold up to 1,400 students, 800 for the public school and 600 for the Catholic.
The school builds will also provide 180 childcare spaces with the allocation of spaces between the elementary and high schools still being determined.
Both Regina Public (RPSD) and Catholic School (RCSD) Boards welcomed the investment but said they’ve been calling for the new schools for more than a decade.
“It’s exactly what Regina needs,” Public School Board Chair Sarah Cummings Truszkowski said. “We’ve been advocating for this for a long time.”
Catholic School Board Chair Shauna Weninger called the announcement “overdue.”
“Like Harbour Landing, this location is very unique,” she added. “[The city] has been building higher density communities than we’re used to.”
The location’s announcement comes as both divisions wrestle with increasing enrolment.
RPSD will not have a final tally on students enrolled for the school year until the end of September but says they have over 26,000 students in their 57 schools across the city.
That is over 800 more than in 2023-24.
Student Enrollment
As for RCSD, there are 13,682 students from pre-K to Grade 12 this year. 492 more students than last year.
“We’ve been dealing with extreme challenges in regard to population, especially in [southeast Regina],” Weninger explained.
“Classrooms have high numbers of students and high [pupil to teacher] ratios.,” Cummings Truszkowski said. “[The new schools] are going to be very full immediately after opening.”
Student Enrollment
NDP Leader Carla Beck highlighted growing classroom complexity concerns.
“It’s not sustainable to continue to pile more and more pressure on teachers,” she said. “It’s about making sure [the government] is focused on delivering the best education for kids.”
Cockrill said the province is working towards bettering education by building more schools as Saskatchewan’s population grows.
“We need buildings to accommodate these students and staff,” he said. “This really highlights the growth of the province and of Regina.”
In August, work also began for a new joint use elementary school and daycare in Regina’s Harbour Landing neighbourhood.
That school’s location was announced in March 2023.
Cockrill added there is no timeline for when shovels will break ground on these newly announced schools in The Towns.
Those details are expected to be finalized once designs and procurement is completed.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
DEVELOPING Hurricane Milton strengthens into a Category 5 storm. Florida orders evacuations
Hurricane Milton strengthens into a Category 5 storm off Mexico and threatens Florida, forecasters say.
'Selfish billionaire': Chip Wilson's mansion vandalized after political sign erected outside
Days after a political sign was erected outside Chip Wilson's Vancouver mansion, the waterfront property has been vandalized with graffiti.
BREAKING Cissy Houston, Whitney Houston's mother and a Grammy-winning singer, dies at 91
Cissy Houston, the mother of the late Whitney Houston and a two-time Grammy winner who performed alongside superstar musicians like Elvis Presley, and Aretha Franklin, has died. She was 91.
Two people injured in apparent road rage incident, shooting in Toronto
Two people are in hospital after they were chased and shot at in what appears to be an act of road rage before eventually flipping their car while trying to escape, police say.
Canadian soldier wins compensation for cancer linked to burn pits after Veterans Affairs denied claim
A Canadian soldier who was exposed to toxic chemicals from burn pits while serving in Afghanistan has been awarded full medical compensation for testicular cancer after Veterans Affairs initially denied his claim.
Sammy Basso, longest living survivor of rare rapid-aging disease progeria, dies at 28
Sammy Basso, who was the longest living survivor of the rare genetic disease progeria, has died at the age of 28, the Italian Progeria Association said on Sunday.
A Canadian woman was recently diagnosed with scurvy. Here are the factors tied to the disease
Scurvy is not just an archaic diagnosis of 18th-century seafarers and doctors should watch for possible cases, according to researchers following a recent case.
Canadian leaders, demonstrators hold events on anniversary of Oct. 7 attack
Ceremonies, events and protests are being held across Canada today to mark the anniversary of a Hamas attack on Israel that triggered the ongoing war in Gaza.
Self-identifying Indigenous group got $74M in federal cash, Inuit leader wants change
As millions in federal funding flow into a Labrador group whose claims of Inuit identity have been rejected by Indigenous organizations across Canada, a national Inuit leader worries the Liberal government is putting the rights of Indigenous Peoples at risk.